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    obliterate
    /əˈblɪtəreɪt/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

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  3. Obliterate means to remove all signs of something, either by destroying it or by covering it so that it cannot be seen. Learn how to use this formal verb in different contexts, with examples and related words and phrases.

    • English (US)

      to remove all signs of something, either by destroying it or...

  4. Obliterate means to remove utterly from recognition or memory, to destroy utterly, or to cancel something. Learn more about its synonyms, examples, word history, and medical usage.

  5. Obliterate means to remove or destroy all traces of something completely. It comes from Latin oblitterāre, meaning to erase or cause to be forgotten. See synonyms, examples, and word history of obliterate.

  6. verb. make undecipherable or imperceptible by obscuring or concealing. synonyms: blot out, hide, obscure, veil. efface. remove completely from recognition or memory. see more. adjective. reduced to nothingness. synonyms: blotted out, obliterated. destroyed. spoiled or ruined or demolished.

  7. obliterate something to remove all signs of something, either by destroying or covering it completely. The building was completely obliterated by the bomb. The snow had obliterated their footprints.

  8. Obliterate means to remove all signs of something, either by destroying it or by covering it so that it cannot be seen. Learn how to use this formal verb in different contexts, with examples and translations in various languages.

  9. If you obliterate something such as a memory, emotion, or thought, you remove it completely from your mind. [ literary ] There was time enough to obliterate memories of how things once were for him.